Introspective as well as empirical evidence indicates that emotions
shape our thinking in numerous ways. Yet, this modificatory aspect of
emotions has received relatively little interest in the philosophy of
emotion. I give a detailed account of this aspect. Drawing both on the
work of William James and adverbialist conceptions of perception, I
sketch a theory of emotions that takes these aspects into consideration
and suggest that we should understand emotions as manners of thinking.
%0 Journal Article
%1 ISI:000379735500001
%A Berninger, Anja
%C 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
%D 2016
%I ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
%J PHILOSOPHICAL PSYCHOLOGY
%K and cognition; emotion emotion} of stream theory thought; {Adverbialism;
%N 6
%P 799-812
%R 10.1080/09515089.2016.1159294
%T Thinking sadly: In favor of an adverbial theory of emotions
%V 29
%X Introspective as well as empirical evidence indicates that emotions
shape our thinking in numerous ways. Yet, this modificatory aspect of
emotions has received relatively little interest in the philosophy of
emotion. I give a detailed account of this aspect. Drawing both on the
work of William James and adverbialist conceptions of perception, I
sketch a theory of emotions that takes these aspects into consideration
and suggest that we should understand emotions as manners of thinking.
@article{ISI:000379735500001,
abstract = {{Introspective as well as empirical evidence indicates that emotions
shape our thinking in numerous ways. Yet, this modificatory aspect of
emotions has received relatively little interest in the philosophy of
emotion. I give a detailed account of this aspect. Drawing both on the
work of William James and adverbialist conceptions of perception, I
sketch a theory of emotions that takes these aspects into consideration
and suggest that we should understand emotions as manners of thinking.}},
added-at = {2017-05-18T11:32:12.000+0200},
address = {{2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND}},
affiliation = {{Berninger, A (Reprint Author), Univ Stuttgart, Dept Philosophy, Stuttgart, Germany.
Berninger, Anja, Univ Stuttgart, Dept Philosophy, Stuttgart, Germany.}},
author = {Berninger, Anja},
author-email = {{anja.berninger@philo.uni-stuttgart.de}},
biburl = {https://puma.ub.uni-stuttgart.de/bibtex/25a7e6adee0b60ed504dfff70f589666f/hermann},
doi = {{10.1080/09515089.2016.1159294}},
eissn = {{1465-394X}},
interhash = {46be8aca07ab033898b906dd6c5316eb},
intrahash = {5a7e6adee0b60ed504dfff70f589666f},
issn = {{0951-5089}},
journal = {{PHILOSOPHICAL PSYCHOLOGY}},
keywords = {and cognition; emotion emotion} of stream theory thought; {Adverbialism;},
keywords-plus = {{SELF-FOCUSED ATTENTION; POSITIVE AFFECT; BASIC EMOTIONS; THOUGHT SPEED;
CORE AFFECT; MOOD; EXPERIENCE; COGNITION; BROADEN}},
language = {{English}},
number = {{6}},
number-of-cited-references = {{72}},
pages = {{799-812}},
publisher = {{ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR \& FRANCIS LTD}},
research-areas = {{Social Sciences - Other Topics; Psychology}},
times-cited = {{0}},
timestamp = {2017-05-18T09:32:12.000+0200},
title = {{Thinking sadly: In favor of an adverbial theory of emotions}},
type = {{Article}},
volume = {{29}},
web-of-science-categories = {{Ethics; Psychology, Multidisciplinary}},
year = {{2016}}
}